you’re forgiven,

you would never know that in 1994

neighbor against neighbor

dead bodies lining the streets

 

1994, it’s hard to place that

as recent – until you see the

color photos and kids sprawled

in the dirt in their nike shoes.

 

there’s a peace here you don’t expect

f r a g i l e , to be handled carefully,

but peace none the less.

 

up the mountain where we walk

one of the roads is blocked off

there’s just been a confession

of a mass grave site from the genocide

so it’s being extricated.

 

we are not hutu or tutsi, they say

we are all r w a n d a n

 

it started with imperialism.

(doesn’t it always?)

 

initially under germany colonization in the late 1800s

the colonists favored the tutsi when assigning

admin roles believing them racially superior

 

starting the rift between hutu and tutsi populations.

 

during world war I belgian forces took over rwanda

and in 1935 introduced identity cards labeling people

as tutsi, hutu, twa or naturalized, preventing any movement

between the groups and creating more division

(still, the tutsi were favored)

 

but after world war II a hutu emancipation movement started

encouraged by the catholic church who had sympathy for the

under privileged hutu

 

in 1957 hutu scholars wrote the bahutu manifesto

first document to label tutsi and hutu as separate races and

rallying for transfer of power from tutsi to hutu based on

statistical law –

 

and then there was an assignation of a hutu sub-chief

and war broke out, the rwandan revolution,

and in 1962 a hutu dominated republic was created

as the country became independent

 

floods of tutsi sought escape in neighboring countries

but they wanted to return, though most of the 300,000

refugees remained so for three decades.

 

in 1990 a refugee tutsi force came in from uganda

under the name rwandan patrotic front (RPF) and for the next

year they waged guerilla type warfare with backing from

france and zaire

 

in 1992 the RPF announced a ceasefire and tried to work

with the government, but in 1993 extremist hutu groups

formed and began large scale violence against the tutsi.

 

the united nations assistance mission for rwanda

(UNAMIR)

brought a peacekeeping force into kigali in 1993

 

(it failed).

 

it’s unclear exactly when the decision was made

to kill the tutsi population on a mass scale, but

soon “lists” were being made and attempts to register

all tutsi’s in kigali continued –

 

in 1994, the commander of UNAMIR received intelligence

of the mass plan for genocide, requesting aide… but

because of poorly dotted i’s and crossed t’s about what the

peacekeeping force was really there to do, no one

was sent. the request went unanswered.

 

another assassination happened in april,

and large scale murder of the tutsi’s began.

 

they set up roadblocks – each person had to show

their identity card, and anyone with a tutsi card was

slaughtered immediately. men, women, and children.

house to house searches ensued,

neighbor against neighbor

 

and each leader of the rural provinces

encouraged hutu civilians to kill

their tutsi friends.

 

machetes. rifles. beatings.

torture. genital mutliation.

systematic r a p e .

they specifically recruited HIV positive men

to rape captive tutsi’s. creating “rape squads,”

 

the goal –

slow, inexorable death.

 

it’s estimated that during the first

six weeks up to 800,000 rwandans

were killed. because many hutu were killed

as well, for reasons such as alleged sympathy

for the tutsi or even just having a similar

 

hutu either took part, or were killed on the s p o t.

 

the RPF made gains, fighting back and most

of the killings stopped at the end of april,

though in rural areas it took longer and the help

of French forces from the united nations –

it was supposed to be a humanitarian mission

but it did not save a lot of lives

(too late?)

 

the international world,

failed again.

(history repeats itself – )

 

UNIMAR had the information

but didn’t act.

 

the French and Belgian forces

focused on higher up officials and high

profile members, and the tutsi they rounded up

in evacuation trucks were often stopped down the road

and slaughtered.

 

the U.S. also reportedly had intelligence

of the plan for mass genocide

but haunted from the history in Somalia

did nothing.

 

…. afterwards, investigations on human rights

violations began, and the Rwandan government

set up gacaca courts to begin the trials for those

involved in the genocide.

 

gacaca in Kinyarwanda means “a bed of soft green grass”

in which ancient communities sat and gathered

to discuss and resolve conflicts within the village

 

local courts throughout rwanda

to “find the truth” in each case.

 

in rwanda and the international community

the courts are still controversial

 

though at the museum and to many rwandans

these courts paved the way for reconciliation between

neighbors, friends, and families.

 

it is unique in the sense it was rwandan led,

sped up the trials

and promoted a culture of

asking for forgiveness

 

the country has gone to great lengths to promote

reconciliation, with programs that set up villages

for perpetrators and victims to live side by side

 

and umuganda, every able bodied Rwandan

18 – 64 takes part in community service for

3 hours a month, so that all Rwandans can work

side by side for the rebuilding of their country.

i hear story after story of hutu people

asking for forgiveness and tutsi survivors

not only forgiving, but r e c o n c i l i n g –

 

their kids play together.

they live side by side.

“i don’t have it in me for revenge,”

one woman says and –

over and over and over, the people say

we must forgive.

we are all r w a n d a n .

it’s different here. you feel it in the air.

the way people go out of their way to help

you, and the way they smile and invite

you into their home.

 

i can’t understand it –

i know Jesus and the power of

forgiveness and still i can’t understand the

healing over this land in which blood

c r i e s out from the ground –

 

(it’s fragile but – )

 

this land of reconciliation.

a people who refused to let tragedy,

horror, and atrocities define them

or their nation.

 

who recognize power in the words

“you are forgiven.”